Example sentences of "[be] [adv] [v-ing] into [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | Liliane & Michel Durand-Dessert are also venturing into photography , showing ‘ preparatory studies ’ by Andy Warhol for portraits and self-portraits . |
2 | Below the surface , other animals are also tuning into water movements . |
3 | Wonderful high-fashion colours are also creeping into underwear ranges . |
4 | I am now going into business by myself . |
5 | The team I tipped at the start of the season are now moving into overdrive . |
6 | ( 1982 ) , and Venkatraman and Camillus ( 1984 ) , also provide classifications , and these alternative perspectives are now creeping into student textbooks ; see , for example , Quinn , Mintzberg and James ( 1988 ) . |
7 | ‘ I 'm just popping into town to pick up a parcel from the station . |
8 | IT had been a cold spring and the trees had been late coming into leaf , but now to-day in the sunshine they were all misted with green . |
9 | When Gan was complete , the Britannias , which were just coming into service with the RAF , would be able to reach Singapore without overflying India . |
10 | He stepped back onto the concrete and came round to the front of the building where the flowering cherries were just coming into bud on the lawn . |
11 | Bills of exchange , the forerunners of cheques , were just coming into fashion . |
12 | When they were in the market she insisted on his buying a pair of white loons , which were just coming into fashion . |
13 | As they climbed over the hedge , he was struck by the beauty of the day ; the hedgerows were just coming into leaf and the meadow was dotted with buttercups and daisies . |
14 | His eyelids were already fluttering into sleep . |
15 | You were always getting into trouble then . " |
16 | By 1719 , the buildings of both the house and the hall were rapidly falling into ruin and a storm of 1720 , blew parts of the hall to the ground , but a stone figure of Haymo blown from a niche over the door was undamaged , falling it is said on to some grass , this was later presented to the Bishop of Rochester . |
17 | ‘ It was n't funny at the time , of course , because young people were really getting into trouble for being too westernised ’ , she told me . |
18 | German formations from the north were now marching into position on either side of 20th Corps , but those assigned to the left wing — called by the Germans the ‘ Eastern Group ’ — might have to face about if Rennenkampf marched south . |
19 | The stern ramp is down almost as quickly as the anchor and the first mexeflote raft is soon manoeuvring into position … . |
20 | The work on designing the scheme is already taking into account the need to cover areas of work with a range of different objectives and requirements . |
21 | Love is already turning into hate |
22 | Love is already turning into hate . |
23 | Ensure that the boom is always pointing into wind . |
24 | If you are close to mastering the slow pirouette , you may find this to be easier since the model is always pointing into wind . |
25 | Hell , this is rapidly turning into shit . |
26 | Bridgefield , Connecticut-based Bristol Technology Inc has its $5,000 HyperHelp 3.0 in beta test and expects to make it commercially available in May : it adds character-based help for terminals , secondary windows , segmented bit maps , history path and support for Windows 3.1 help ; Bristol 's SBML Easy ! , the HyperHelp Standard Generalised Markup Language , is also going into beta test , with the general release expected in June . |
27 | One of the methods that the business intends to use to stay on top is now coming into play . |
28 | After a year of further research , planning , test transmissions and consultation with concerned groups , the service is now going into operation on the main edition of Central News . |
29 | But Hunting has invested £10m of its own money in BAe 's new Jetstream 41 which is now going into production . |
30 | That beer swilling , tattooed , sexist monstrosity which is fast heading into extinction anyway . |